Watch Dogs: Legion reverted to type, being a largely uninteresting tale with outdated mechanics and a frustrating choice of characters. Its saving grace was London, and how it had managed to capture a level of authenticity while also making it a fun place to explore for natives of the English capital. It’s clear after three installments that Watch Dogs’ strength is in its ability to present an interesting and accurate setting, so it’s all to easy for players to theorize about where, if anywhere, it should go next. There are a handful of obvious choices like Tokyo and New York, but the happenings in Seattle, Washington makes it ripe for Ubisoft to take advantage of.

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Seattle is a Technological Wonderland

Seattle is also far different in tone style, and geography than any of the cities Ubisoft has previously visited. While the smoky, industrial, and often rainy London streets offer their own flavor and San Francisco feels like a vacation in comparison, Seattle could be altogether unique. Its populated markets, passionate sports teams, and place at the foot of Mount Rainier gives it a deep sense of identity, and being tucked in the Pacific Northwest means it’s far from the top of international tourists’ list of places to visit in the USA.

Watch_Dogs Wouldn’t be the First Visitor to Seattle

Seattle is no stranger to video games, as it has been reimagined in such titles as The Last of Us 2 and InFamous Second Son effectively. The former does well to bring an entirely different vibe to the city with structural, geographical, and tonal changes that suit the story being told, and the latter has a brightness and size that makes each location and landmark feel easy to traverse. Watch Dogs always strives to craft a more ambitious open-world than the one presented in InFamous Second Son, though, and given the attention to detail present in Watch Dogs 2’s San Francisco Bay Area, Ubisoft could definitely capture Seattle’s best side.

Watch Dogs still has so much to offer the video game space, and while it has core mechanics that aren’t as fresh as they were when the series debuted, the way they handle setting, scope, and side activities is largely unparalleled. The franchise is fun simply to exist in, and meandering across the landscape in search of landmarks makes up a lot of the fun to be had. It’s clear the series thrives when it’s in America, as Watch Dogs: Legion didn’t quite go to plan, and Seattle is a town that has a deep sense of identity and community that Ubisoft could surely replicate.

Watch Dogs Legion is available on PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S.

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